Installation instructionsThese are the generic installation instructions for the K
Desktop Environment. Please complement your reading with the
READMEs and INSTALLs that
come along with the package. Please read them carefully and try to
help yourself out if anything goes wrong. If you need further
assistance, consider joining the &kde; mailing lists
(see our web site instructions for joining the &kde;
mailing
lists) or newsgroups.To the would-be convertsSo you have heard the rumors. Or you have seen the screenshots.
And you are dying to get hold of &kde;. But you know next to nothing
about this whole alternative OS business. Don't worry!
You only need to do some (well, maybe not some) reading, that's
all!&kde; does not run on any version of &Microsoft; &Windows; or OS/2 (yet). To run
&kde;, you need to have a &UNIX; system. Please refer to for more details.Decide on a platform and set it up for your system. This
FAQ can not help you with this, since &kde; runs on many &UNIX; platforms. Finally, you are ready to commence the &kde; installation.
Please start reading from the next section. To get &kde;, please
refer to . Last but not least, if
you encounter any problems while installing &kde;, please do not
hesitate to make use of the &kde; mailing lists and newsgroups. But do bear this in mind: no
question is too silly to ask, but some are too silly to answer,
especially when they are already answered in this FAQ.Good luck and have fun!What kind of hardware do I need to run &kde; ?To run &kde; it is recommended that you have at least a pentium II processor, 64MB of memory and 500MB of free disk space for a basic installation. While &kde; may run on slower configurations than this, performance can be severely impaired. Generally, if your computer runs an &X-Server; already with other desktop environments or window managers it's probably fast enough to run &kde;.Available package formatsYou can find several kinds of binary and source packages for
different distributions and operating systems on the &kde-ftp;. The
binary packages are not made by the &kde; Team, but by the
distributors themselves, or some dedicated individuals. Please refer to
&kde; Package Policy
Explained for information about the &kde; Package Policy. The
only official release is the source tar.bz2
packages. Please refer to the READMEs and
INSTALLs in the several binaries folders. For
a list of the available packages for a release, refer to the relevant
info page. For the latest release this is the &kde; 3.4.1 Info
Page.PrerequisitesFor &kde; 3.4.1, you need the &Qt; library version 3.3 or greater.
Please make sure you download the correct &Qt;. You will
also need the header files, if you want to compile &kde;
yourself. They are all available, at no cost, from http://www.trolltech.com/download.
In addition, there are optional libraries that might improve &kde; if
installed on your system. An example is OpenSSL which will enable
&konqueror; to browse web pages securely and is needed in a version
>=0.9.6. These should be provided by your distributor; if not, ask
for an update.Description of the base packagesThe base distribution currently consists of twenty
packages. Some are required, while others are optional. Each package
is available in each of the aforementioned package formats.tdelibsRequiredThis package contains shared libraries that are needed by all
&kde; applications.tdebaseRequiredThis package contains the base applications that form the core
of the K Desktop Environment like the window manager, the terminal
emulator, the control center, the file manager, and the panel.&arts;RequiredThe &arts; sound server. A powerful, network transparent sound
server.tdeaddonsOptionalVarious plugins for &kate;, &kicker;, &knewsticker;, &konqueror; and &noatun; tdeartworkOptionalAdditional wallpapers, themes, styles, sounds ...tdebindingsOptionalVarious bindings for other languages, including &Java;, Perl, Python, ...tdegamesOptionalVarious games like &kmahjongg;, &ksnake;, &kasteroids;, and
&kpatience;.tdegraphicsOptionalVarious graphics-related programs like &PostScript; previewer,
&DVI; previewer, and a drawing program.tdeutilsOptionalVarious desktop tools like a calculator, an editor and other
nifty stuff.tdemultimediaOptionalMultimedia applications like a &CD; player and a mixer.tdenetworkOptionalNetwork applications. Currently contains the instant messaging client &kopete;, the
download manager &kget;, and several other network-related programs.tdepimOptionalPersonal information management tools. Contains the email client &kmail;, the newsreader &knode; and other related programs.tdeadminOptionalSystem administration programs.tdeeduOptional
Educational and entertaining applications for &kde;'s younger users.
tdeaccessibilityOptional
KDE accessibility programs such as a screen magnifier and speech synthesizer front end.
tdetoysOptionalToys!tdevelopOptionalA complete Integrated Development Environment for &kde; and QttdewebdevOptionalWeb development applications. Contains such applications as &quanta;, an integrated web development environment and other applications useful in web developmenttdesdkOptionalKDE Software Development Kit. Contains a collection of applications and tools used by KDE Developers.&arts; and then tdelibs should be installed before everything
else, and tdeaddons last. The other packages can be installed in any
arbitrary order.Most package management tools will let you put all these
packages in one folder and install them all at once, figuring out
the dependencies as they go.Installation instructions for the different package
formatsPlease do not forget to read the README and INSTALL files if they are available.Installation of the Debian packagesThe Debian packages install in accordance with the upcoming FHS (File
Hierarchy Standard).become superuserrun dpkg for
every package you want to install.Installation of the RPM packagesTo install binary RPMsbecome superuserexecute rpm Installation of the source .tar.bz2 filesSince there are always changes and updates to the way &kde; is compiled, please
refer to Download and Install from Source for the most up to date installation instructions for the source packages.
The general approach should work in most cases though.
The source .tar.bz2 package installs into /usr/local/kde by default. You can
override this setting by using the option of
the configure script.unpack the packages with tar change folder to the package folder: cd
packagenameconfigure the package: ./configureSome packages (notably tdebase) have special configuration
options that might be applicable to your installation. Type
./configure to see the
available options.build the package: makeinstall the package: su (if you aren't already root). If you
already are, just type make
.Post-installation proceduresFirst of all, please make sure that you have added &kde;'s binary
installation folder (⪚ /usr/local/kde/bin) to your PATH
and &kde;'s
library installation folder to your LD_LIBRARY_PATH (only
necessary on systems that do not support rpath; on &Linux; &ELF;, it
should work without). This environment variable may be called
differently on some systems, ⪚ it is called
SHLIB_PATH on &IRIX;. Then set the environment variable
KDEDIR to the base of your &kde; tree, ⪚ /usr/local/kde.
Please bear in mind that it is unwise to set
LD_LIBRARY_PATH blindly. In the vast majority of cases it is
unnecessary and can do more harm than good. There is a web page
written by Dave
Barr explaining the evils of LD_LIBRARY_PATH and it can be
found at http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/~barr/ldpath.html.Even though you can use most of the &kde; applications simply by
calling them, you can only benefit fully from &kde;'s advanced
features if you use the &kde; window manager and its helper
programs.In order to make it easy for you, we have provided a simple
script called startkde which gets installed in $KDEDIR/bin and is therefore in your
path.Edit the file .xinitrc in your home folder (make a backup
copy first!), remove everything that looks like calling a window
manager, and insert startkde instead. Restart the &X-Server;. If you use
&kdm;/xdm, you will have to edit the file .xsession instead of
.xinitrc. And if there is no .xinitrc or .xsession in your home
folder, simply create a new one with just one line containing
startkde.
Some systems (notably &RedHat; &Linux;) use .Xclients
instead.This should present you with a new shining &kde; desktop. You
can now start to explore the wonderful world of &kde;. In case you
want to read some documentation first, there is a highly recommended
Quick Start
guide available. Furthermore, every application has an online
help that is available via the help menu.Should I remove old version xyz before installing a new
one?In principle, this is not necessary. RPM and Debian packages
should take care of all dependencies.If you compile the source code yourself, you should take more care.
Instructions for running two different versions of &kde; on the same system are
given at http://developer.kde.org/build/kde2-and-trinity.html.
However, please note that running two different versions of &kde; from source
can lead to problems if you are not careful. How do I start &kde;?The most comfortable method to start &kde; is to use the
startkde script. Simply put the line
startkde at the end of your .xsession
file (or your .xinitrc or .Xclients
file if you are not using &kdm; or xdm). Please
also remove the lines that start your previous window manager. If there is no
.xsession, .xinitrc, or
.Xclients in your home folder, simply create a new one
that contains just one line: startkde.Is it possible to install &kde; in my home directory?Yes, you can install &kde; in any folder you want. What you
have to do depends on the kind of packages you want to install:Source packagesConfigure and install the package using configure
;
make; make install to install into /home/me. Replace /home/me with your home directory, generally defined in $HOMEAdd the following to your init files. Please note that if
it is not necessary for you to set LD_LIBRARY_PATH, it
is better to leave it out.For csh or tcsh:
setenv KDEDIR /home/me
if ( $?LD_LIBRARY_PATH ) then
setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH $KDEDIR/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
else
setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH $KDEDIR/lib
endif
if ( ! $?LIBRARY_PATH ) then
setenv LIBRARY_PATH $LD_LIBRARY_PATH
endif
For bash:
KDEDIR=/home/me
PATH=$KDEDIR/bin:$PATH
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$KDEDIR/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
export KDEDIR PATH LD_LIBRARY_PATH LIBRARY_PATH
RPM packagesrpm allows you to use the
option to select the folder you want to
install to. For example, executing rpm will install the package
to /home/me.Although &kde; will run from a user folder, there are some
problems with programs that require suid root, ⪚ the programs in
the tdeadmin package. But since they are not meant to be run by users
in the first place, this is nothing to worry about.However, on systems using shadow passwords, the screensavers
have to be suid root to enable password access for unlocking the
screen, so this option will not work.startkde fails with can not connect to X
server. What is wrong?You probably tried to start the X server with startkde. The X
server is started with startx.
startkde is the
script that should be run from your .xinitrc, .xsession, or
.Xclients to activate the window manager and the necessary server
daemons for &kde;. See also .&kde; on &AIX;?
IBM now officially support &kde; on &AIX;. You can find
details at http://www.ibm.com/servers/aix/products/aixos/linux/index.html.
There is also some older information at http://space.twc.de/~stefan/kde/aix.html.&kde; on a laptop?If you can get &X-Window; to run on your laptop, you should not have any problem
getting &kde; to run on it. In addition, you might find the following
links helpful:http://www.linux-laptop.net/http://www.sanpei.org/Laptop-X/note-list.htmlI do not like the default &kde; folder after installation. How
do I move it without breaking anything?Assuming the default is /opt/kde and you want to move it to
/usr/local/kde, here's what
you have to do:change to superuser if you aren't alreadymv /opt/kde /usr/local/kdeln -s /usr/local/kde
/opt/kdeThis will put all your &kde; files in /usr/local/kde but everything is
still accessible from /opt/kde.What files can I delete from my &kde; install folder? Can all the
*.h, *.c and *.o
files be safely removed?There should not be any need to keep the .c and
.o files, but you might want to keep the
.h files, as they are used by includes if you ever want to
compile your own &kde; programs. But if you wish to add patches to the source
programs as they become available (rather than downloading everything again),
then they should stay.Will I lose my current settings when I upgrade &kde;?No. In most cases &kde; will be able to transport your settings
intact. You may need to reenter passwords in some applications (such
as &kmail; or &knode;) but most other settings will be safe.There were mixed reports of results between some previous
versions of &kde;. To be safe, you may like to back up your entire
&kde; configuration. Settings are kept in the $HOME/.kde or $HOME/.kde2 subfolder in your home
folder. Copy your
old .kde/.kde2 folder to a backup location,
install &kde; 3.2, and then copy back any necessary mail and news
settings. That said, most people can make a direct upgrade, without
removing the old .kde folder,
without a hitch.You can override the use of $HOME/.kde by setting the
$KDEHOME variable.I upgraded &kde; and it seemed to go fine, but when I start it,
I get a blank gray screen, and nothing happens. There are errors in
the console about DCOPserver. What's going on?
&kde; uses several temporary files during its operation.
These are usually to be found in the following locations:~/.DCOPserver-* (there are usually two of these; one is a symlink to the other)~/.kde/socket-hostname~/.kde/tmp-hostname which is normally a symlink to the next file:/tmp/tmp-kde-USER~/.kde/socket-hostname which is also normally a symlink to:/tmp/ksocket-USERIf the symlinks get broken, usually because a
cron or shutdown script is emptying out the
/tmp folder, then strange
things will happen. These files, and the symlinks, will all be
created automatically at the start of &kde; so you can safely remove
them while &kde; is not running.If you are only getting a gray screen when you start &kde;, or if you get an error message telling you to Check your installation, then shut down X and delete all the files listed above, then try to restart X.Normally (&ie; when not upgrading between &kde; versions) it's
quite safe to leave these files intact, and you may shave a few
seconds off your &kde; startup time by doing so.Compiling tdebase gives me a bin/sh: msgfmt: command
not found error!You need the &GNU; msgfmt which is
part of the &GNU; i18n package gettext.
You should be able to download it from any
&GNU; mirror.How do I uninstall &kde; applications compiled from
source?You can uninstall your programs by typing make
uninstall in the folder where you did make
install. If you have already deleted that folder,
then there is only one way, and it is not good: go to $KDEDIR/bin and start deleting files
one by one.If you expect to find yourself in this situation, you might want to
consider a program such as &GNU; stow, found at
http://www.gnu.org/software/stow/stow.html.What is up with &GIF; support?This has to do with issues with Unisys' &LZW; patent. &GIF;
support is turned off from &Qt; 1.44 onwards by default. When you want to use
&GIF;s and have the relevant license, recompile &Qt; with &GIF; support.
./configure .